The case comes before the court for decision upon the pleadings alone, and the exceptions interposed by the claimants, are tantamount to a demurrer to the libel. (Benedict Pr., §§466, 468; Betts Pr., 48.) Some of the objections are formal in their character, and may, if well taken, be obviated by the libellants in reforming their libel. Others go to the merits of the case and are peremptory and final in their character. The question upon the merits, presented on the face of the libel, is whether the admiralty courts of the United States can take cognizance of a claim over a lien supposed to be acquired against a vessel for labor, materials and supplies furnished her in a port foreign to her own within the United States; that is, whether a vessel owned in New York, on a voyage to Buenos Ayres, being driven by stress of weather into a port in Florida, and there obtaining necessary repairs and supplies on credit, is subject to an action in rem therefor, in this district, on her return to it. The libel avers that the credit was procured by the master of the vessel for her necessities, and that he had no funds to pay for them, and that her owners resided in New York, and had no credit or means of credit in Florida to supply her wants.
A question would hardly.have been mooted in this court upon this point, as the law in respect to the scope of maritime jurisdiction was accepted and administered here prior to the decision of the case of Pratt agt. Reed, by the supreme court in December Term, 1856, (19 How. R., 359,) and the case which followed in the same court of the claimants of the steamboat Jefferson agt. Beers, (20 How., 393, December term, 1857,) and the case in this court of Collis agt. The Schr. Coemine, (24 vol. MSS. decisions, 41, May term, 1858.) But it is insisted on the part of the claimants in this cause that the former doctrine in relation to the *451jurisdiction of the admiralty over maritime liens upon American vessels arising out of contract, is so modified and restrained as to prevent its exercise unless in cases of bottomry, or express hypothecation, or that species of credit tantamount to them.
I consider it unnecessary to recapitulate the authorities which introduced or sanctioned the rule of maritime law, which has long prevailed in the admiralty courts of this country, that a credit given a vessel on the application of her master in a foreign port, for labor, materials, or supplies furnished to her necessities, constitutes a lien on the vessel as a security for such credit, if the master had no funds or credit at the place by which he could obtain them, or the owners were without such means which the master could command; because that doctrine was'fully examined and ratified by the supreme court in the case of Thomas agt. Osborne, (19 How. R., 22.) There was a difference of opinion on the Bench, as to the fact whether' the credit in that case was given to the vessel or personally to the master, but the judgment of the court was pointed and explicit that the case was one of a maritime lien and of admiralty jurisdiction, if the credit in the case was given to the vessel. Had the transaction upon which this suit is founded, occurred in a port out of the United States, the facts alleged upon the libel and admitted by the exceptions, would indisputably be embraced within the principles and therms of the rule declared and adopted in the decision of Thomas agt. Osborne.
The case of Pratt agt. Reed, decided nearly simultaneously with that of Thomas agt. Osborne, differs from it in these two particulars
1st. That the credit in the former was obtained in a port of the United States, foreign to the home port of the vessel, and that the master who obtained it, was also owner of the vessel, but there is no manifest disaccord in the doctrines declared in the two cases, as to the character and *452degree of the necessities required (i. e. for supplies to the vessel and the pledge or credit of the vessel,) in order to render the advances procured in her favor, a lien on the vessel, except the declaration of the court in Pratt agt. Reed, that “ it is a misapprehension to suppose circumstances of less pressing necessity for supplies and repairs and an implied hypothecation of the vessel to procure them will satisfy the rule than is sufficient to justify a loan of money on bottomry for the like purpose.”
There may be distinctions between _ the foundations of-a bottomry contract, and an implied or simple hypothecation creating a lien, but that is not a point important to consider in this case.
■ The decision in Collis agt. The Schooner Coemine, in this court, was placed upon the facts and rule stated in Pratt agt. Reed, and does not attempt to extend that principle a¡ shade beyond.
The case of the Steamboat Jefferson agt. Beers, (20 How., 393,) does not appear to me to involve any point of jurisdiction applicable to the question in controversy in this cause. It appears aimed chiefly to determine that admiralty courts cannot take cognizance of claims or contracts touching the construction of vessels in ports of the United States. The other questions discussed on that decision, supply no doctrines controlling the facts of this case.
I am of ,the impression that there is practically no distinction between the rights and remedies of the libellants upon this cause of action, whether incurred in a port out of the home port, and therefore in that sense in a foreign port, or in one territorially alien and foreign to the United States. The term is of the same import applied to either locality. In Pratt agt. Reed, the court seem to consider each to be of the same signification, because they say “ this is the case of a foreign ship, the vessel belonging at Buffalo as her home port, and the debt contracted at Brie in the state of Pennsylvania.”
*453In my opinion the libel sets forth facts which constitute a lien upon the vessel, and a right of action in this court in favor of the libellants, to enforce it, and that a decree upon the merits must be rendered in their favor, overruling the exceptions interposed on the part of the claimants.
The pleading in the libel is sufficiently full. It is unnecessary to spread out the evidence upon which the allegations rest. The particulars and amounts which make up the claim are matters for reference, or for investigation on trial, if the claimants come into court upon answer. A case of necessity for "the credit procured by the master, and the consequent lien is sufficiently shown by the libel; and as those averments now stand before the court admitted by operation of the exceptions, the libellants are entitled to a decree for their debt and condemnation of the vessel to satisfy the same. The amount to be ascertained by reference to a commissioner to determine and report it to the court.
The claimants may, however, have leave to put in an answer to thé merits within ten days after notice of this decree, and on payment of costs to be taxed.